The Star Malaysia

A bitter battle

Political foes Iran, US ready for World Cup showdown

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TWENTY-FOUR years after their first World Cup meeting billed as the “Mother of all football matches”, Iran and the United States face off in a politicall­y-charged showdown today with a place in the knockout rounds up for grabs.

Decades of mutual enmity between the arch geopolitic­al foes is the backdrop to what promises to be a white-hot sporting occasion at Doha’s Al Thumama Stadium.

In the context of the tournament, the stakes are simple – a win for either team secures a place in the last 16 while defeat will guarantee eliminatio­n.

But the wider significan­ce of the Group B contest is less clear-cut.

The United States and Iran have been bitter ideologica­l enemies for more than four decades, severing diplomatic relations after the 1979 Islamic Revolution.

Quite what bearing that has on a 90-minute World Cup football match involving 22 players remains to be seen.

United States coach Gregg Berhalter has been at pains to dampen suggestion­s that the game carries a political dimension.

“I envision the game being hotly contested for the fact that both teams want to advance to

“I envision the game being hotly contested for the fact that both teams want to advance to the next round – not because of politics or relations between our countries.” Gregg berhalter

the next round – not because of politics or because of relations between our countries,” Berhalter said.

“We are football players and we’re going to compete and they’re going to compete and that’s it.”

Yet Berhalter’s desire for politics to be absent from the occasion may be wishful thinking.

A public relations gaffe by US Soccer – posting a modified version of Iran’s national flag on the US team’s social media feeds in what it said was a gesture of solidarity with Iranian women protesters – has infuriated football authoritie­s in Teheran.

The offending post was removed from official US Soccer feeds on Sunday after the Iran Football Federation lodged a complaint with world governing body FIFA.

The controvers­y almost certainly guarantees that what was already shaping up as a nail-biting showdown today is likely to carry a crackle of political tension.

The American class of 2022 insist that politics won’t come into the latest instalment of the Us-iran World Cup rivalry.

“The emotional side of having to win to get to the next round is enough to be up for it,” US defender Tim Ream said on Sunday. “I don’t think we have to worry about anything else.

“What is on the line is advancing into the knockout stages.

“And if that’s not enough then I think we have issues.”

 ?? ?? no surrrender: us coach Gregg berhalter and Iran head coach Carlos Queiroz (right) will be involved in a tense match-up. — reuters/ap
no surrrender: us coach Gregg berhalter and Iran head coach Carlos Queiroz (right) will be involved in a tense match-up. — reuters/ap

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